
Jersey moonlight walk to remember lost loved ones
Ms Brockbank said: "Whether you're walking to celebrate the lives of those no longer with us, make new memories, or perhaps a bit of both - it's about coming together as a community to show how much we value our hospice's work."The charity said marshals and water stops would be positioned along the routes and entrants would get a cup of tea and some cake when they finish.Entries cost £31.50 for a family of two adults and two children or £10.50 for people aged 16 or over and £5.25 for under 16s, who must be accompanied by an adult, the charity said.
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The Guardian
23 minutes ago
- The Guardian
The Guardian view on Labour's NHS plan: it is right to celebrate medical science, but delivery is the hard part
The NHS is a totemic institution in Labour's history and that of the country, and voters care more about it than most things the government does. So the publication of Labour's 10-year plan for health in England was a crucial opportunity for ministers to show that they are in tune with the public. Given that satisfaction with the health service has hit a record low of 21%, and doctors are again threatening to go on strike, the announcement was also a moment of peril – even before the damage suffered by the prime minister and chancellor earlier this week, when rebels forced a U-turn on planned cuts to welfare. The overarching principles of Labour's reforms were set out last year: more prevention, more technology, more care delivered in the community (as opposed to in hospital). So the challenge was to find something fresh, original and hopeful to say. The promise of science and the potential of localism are what Wes Streeting's team has come up with. The strand of DNA pictured on the document's cover points to high expectations of genomic medicine and other cutting-edge technology. Neighbourhood clinics, by contrast, represent a prosaic recognition of demand for more ordinary services and treatments, from an ageing and increasingly unhealthy population. The aim is to deliver most outpatient care away from hospitals by 2035. This could mean GP surgeries becoming more like hospitals, or hospital trusts taking a bigger role in primary care. The plans for new contracts make it clear that both are possible. But while this sounds fine in theory, questions remain over how, and by whom, such crucial decisions will be taken, and whether the new model will be better than the old one. With the abolition of NHS England, and scaling back of integrated care boards, the existing administration is being radically downsized. One of the risks of the next few years is that this backstage upheaval will distract time and energy from the frontline. Plans to shift resources from richer areas to poorer ones deserve an unequivocal welcome. There is no great secret about expertise being concentrated in prestigious teaching hospitals, or about richer, better educated people being more confident advocates for themselves and their loved ones. Shifting the 'best to the rest' is both a neat slogan and an acknowledgment of present unfairness. Plans to integrate employment support and services such as debt advice into healthcare hubs signal an encouraging awareness that illness and disability have socioeconomic as well as biological causes. The plan tells a promising story. Healthcare is an area of human progress that all can celebrate. It is plausible that proactive Labour ministers can both drive advances and ensure that they are more equitably shared than in marketised systems. Embedding more healthcare workers in communities, and focusing on outreach, could help to improve population health. But there are some worrying gaps. Social care reform is due to be tackled separately, but worsening mental health, particularly in young people, also needs dedicated attention and research. Ministers should also be pressed on the contradictions between their health plan and their pro-growth, anti-regulation message to businesses – including those that sell alcohol and the high-sugar foods that cause obesity. Having brought control of the NHS in England back in-house, to the heart of government, Mr Streeting must now find the people with the imagination to further develop his plan, while turning it into action.


Sky News
28 minutes ago
- Sky News
Wes Streeting admits improving GP services will be a challenge but is one he will 'take on the chin'
Improving NHS GP services will be a challenge but it is one the health secretary will take "on the chin", he told Sky News. The government launched its 10-year plan for the NHS on Thursday, including moving care into the community, digitising the service and focusing on prevention rather than sickness. Labour pledged in its manifesto to "build an NHS fit for the future", including cutting waiting times and the "return of the family doctor". But since coming to power last July, 62 GP surgeries have closed, and 5.8 million people a month waited more than 14 days to see a GP compared with 5.4 million in the same period last year. Health Secretary Wes Streeting told Sky News health correspondent Ashish Joshi: "I take your challenge on the chin about trying to stop practices from closing, trying to stop GPs leaving the profession and to make sure people have an improving experience in general practice. "That's why neighbourhood health is such a big part of the plan. "When I'm reporting back on progress, whether on GPs recruited or the fact NHS waiting lists are the lowest levels in two years, it's not because I think jobs done, I'm not trying to do victory laps or overclaim what we've managed to do. "It's more to report back to a sceptical public that actually, we are moving finally in the right direction. "But I don't doubt for a moment there is more to do and I take that challenge really seriously because we can't succeed without GPs and the NHS will not survive and thrive without bringing back that family doctor relationship." 4:56 Earlier, Sir Keir Starmer said the 10-year plan's aim is to shift care away from under-pressure medical facilities and closer to people's homes, while taking measures to prevent people needing treatment in the first place. Core elements of his plan include a hugely enhanced NHS app to give patients more control over their care and access to more data, new neighbourhood health centres open six days a week and at least 12 hours a day, and new laws on food and alcohol to prevent ill health. He said the government had already done much to turn things around, with new staff in mental health and general practice, 170 new diagnostic services, new surgical hubs, mental health units, ambulance sites, and "record investment right across the system". But he added: "I'm not going to stand here and say everything is perfect now - we have a lot more work to do, and we will do it. "Because of the fair choices we made, the tough Labour decisions we made, the future already looks better for the NHS."


BBC News
39 minutes ago
- BBC News
Missed chances to prevent boy's sepsis death, inquest jury finds
Missed opportunities to provide earlier care contributed to the death of a three-year-old boy, an inquest jury has Tuikubulau died from a Strep A infection which led to sepsis, the jury at County Hall in Exeter Kenneford called 111 on the evening of 7 July, 2022, because her son was unwell, but the inquest heard ambulance crews took 90 minutes to reach Theo's home in Torpoint, Cornwall, due to the grading given to the call. He died in the early hours the next jury heard Theo would not have had a cardiac arrest and would not have died if he had arrived at hospital sooner. Ms Kenneford told the inquest Theo was a "happy, loving and affectionate little boy" who was obsessed with buses and fire engines and loved being at 10-person jury concluded delays in ambulances, ambulance call categorisations and a 72-hour hotline to the hospital's child assessment unit all contributed to his jury concluded there were "missed opportunities" in his early Ms Kenneford made the 111 call on 7 July, Theo had already been admitted and discharged from Plymouth's Derriford Hospital the previous day with a suspected upper respiratory infection, the inquest heard. Quickly deteriorated For the previous 36 hours before the call, Theo had been gradually getting sicker with a high temperature, flu-like symptoms, breathing difficulties and was reluctant to drink or eat, the hearing was 21:47 BST on July 7, Ms Kenneford rang a 72-hour hotline to the child assessment unit at the hospital where Theo had been earlier and spoke to a nurse who suggested she give Theo some sugary drinks.A recorded 111 call heard Theo "grunting" as he inquest heard Ms Kenneford made a series of 111 calls the night before making a 999 call.A category one response was made following the 999 call and Theo was taken back to Derriford Hospital when he suffered a cardiac arrest. He died a short time later as his parents held his hands. Early identification challenging Consultant paediatrician Dr Andy Robinson told the inquest jury Theo did not have sepsis when he assessed him two days prior to his inquest heard he would have got to hospital earlier had a 111 operator graded his call as life-threatening. Darryn Allcorn, chief nurse and director of integrated professions at University Hospitals Plymouth NHS Trust, said the "early identification of sepsis in children be challenging, even for very experienced healthcare staff". "Whilst NICE [National Institute for Health and Care Excellence] guidance and all relevant procedures were followed including Theo being examined carefully, he was diagnosed with a viral infection and thought well enough to return home," he said."He deteriorated quickly afterwards."Our staff are committed to always considering sepsis as a possible diagnosis in any child who presents as unwell with a fever."We continue to give our heartfelt condolences to Theo's family and will continue to offer them our support."